The Black Poetry of Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de Lima: A

Transcrição

The Black Poetry of Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de Lima: A
Inti: Revista de literatura hispánica
Volume 1 | Number 4
Article 13
1976
The Black Poetry of Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de
Lima: A Comparative Study
Earl E. Fitz
Citas recomendadas
Fitz, Earl E. (Otoño 1976) "The Black Poetry of Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de Lima: A Comparative
Study," Inti: Revista de literatura hispánica: No. 4, Article 13.
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THE BLACK POETRY OF NICOLÁS GUILLÉN AND JORGE DE
LIMA: A COMPARATIVE STUDY
Earl E. Fitz
Nicolás Guillén (b. 1944) has long been hailed as the principal force behind
the Afro-Cuban movement in Spanish American literature. One of the most
engaging poets in Latin America, Guillén is a master at employing verbal
rhythms which are often alien to the Spanish language. Typically, he emphasizes
the spoken mode of poetry and utilizes a heavily African vocabulary in his
refrains. Spanish versification, which traditionally has rested upon rules of
syllabication, is supplanted in Guillén's poetry in favor of the speech patterns
and linguistic habits of the Cuban people, the rhythms of folk ballads, and the
lexicons of Africa.
A contemporary of Guillén (who, like Guillén, is a mulatto) and another
outstanding proponent of Afro-Americanism in literature is the Brazilian Jorge
De Lima (1893-1953). In Brazil, a nation whose history has included an
extensive, though sometimes subdued Negro literature, and which has recently
shown a new awareness of its African roots, it has been poetry more than prose
that has carried the banner of Black awareness. 1 And among all of Brazil's gifted
Negro and mulatto poets, Jorge de Lima has gained fame as the greatest of these
writers. Like Guillen, Lima makes use of traditional folk rhythms and ballads
while also working pure Africanisms into his poetic diction. Both Guillén and
Lima indulge in a demotic language that is incantatory in its sonority and
repetitiveness. Yet their poetry is often exotic or picturesque in its imagery even
while sounding a note of protest against the suffering and exploitation of black
men and women in Brazil and Cuba. The Brazilian poet's sense of Black
awareness, however, is tied directly to his nation's Modernismo movement,
which dates from the Semana de Arte Moderna in February of 1922. Although
there was already a "Negro literature" in the nineteenth century, it was not until
the 1920's that there appeared in Latin America a literature which depicted
Negro values as being superior to those of the white populace. 2 Seen in this
context, both Lima and Guillen are attempting to return to one of the deepest
roots of their respective ethnic backgrounds. By writing a type of poetry which
fosters and encourages a sense of racial pride and sociopolitical awareness, both
Nicolás Guillen and Jorge de Lima are attempting to give artistic form to the
extensive role played by Negroes and mulattoes in the culture of Latin America.
Both these poets go beyond the early forms of Afro-American poetry, the
mere repetition of African words and the depiction of voluptuous,
hip-swaying black women; they become artistic interpreters of Negro dialects,
speech and dance rhythms, and social attitudes. Guillén, for example, makes this
manifest in his first volume of verse, Motivos de Són (1930). These poems,
which represent life as the black man and woman in Cuba live it, emphasize a
colloquial language that is rich in the color, sound, and vitality of non-white
Cuba. We see both the old pre-slavery Africa, with its proud, free people, and
the New World Negro with all of his poverty, exploitation, and enslavement.
Two examples of the "són," a type of popular song and dance of which there are
many examples in Motivos de Són, are "Negro Bembón":
Por qué te pone tan bravo, cuando
te dicen negro bembón, si tiene la
boca santa, negro bembón?
Te queja todavía, negro
bembón; sin pega y con
harina, negro bembón,
majagua de aril blanco,
negro bembón; zapato de
do tono, negro bembón. . . 3
and "Mulata":
Tanto tren con tu cuerpo,
tanto tren;
tanto tren con tu boca,
tanto tren;
tanto tren con tu sojo,
tanto tren.
Si tú supiera, mulata, la
verdá;
¡qué yo con mi negra tengo,
y no te quiere pa na. 4
But in the early "negrista" poetry of Jorge de Lima we see the same usage
of African lore, folk poetry, and popular speech patterns. In Essa Negra Fulô
(1928), a work which is widely acclaimed as a masterpiece of Afro-Brazilian
literature, we witness the unfolding of a sexual encounter between the races
which has had profound significance for all of Brazilian culture. In fact, the
subject of this poem, in its larger sociological context,
has been thoroughly discussed by Gilberto Freyre in his famous Casa Grande e
Senzala (1933). As Lima writes:
Ora, se deu que chegou (isso
já faz muito tempo) no
banguê dum meu avô urna
negra bonitinha chamada
negra Fulô.
Essa negra Fulô!
Essa negra Fulô!
Ó Fulô! Ó Fulô! (era a fala
da Sinhá.) Vai forrar a minha
cama, pentear os meus
cábelos, vem ajudar a tirar a
minha roupa Fulô!
Essa negra Fulô!
O Sinhô foi ver a negra
levar couro do feitor. A
negra tirou a roupa.
O Sinhô foi açoitar
sôzinho a negra Fulô. A
negra tirou a saia e tirou
o cabeçao, d dentro dele
pulou nuinha a negra
Fulô.
Essa negra Fulô!
Essa negra Fulô!
Ó Fulô? Ó Fulô?
Cadê, cadê teu Sinhô
que nosso Senhor me mandou?
Ah! foi voce que roubou,
foi voce, negra Fulô? 5
So Jorge de Lima, always concerned with the individual Negro soul, with his
sense of self-identity and ethnic awareness, 6 is also deeply aware of the need to
call for a more general recognition of the profound role African slaves have
played in the development of Brazilian civilization. In "Ancila Negra," for
example, we read:
Há muita coisa a recalcar, Celidonia,
ó linda moleca ioruba que embalou
minha rêde, me acompanhou para a
escola, me contou histórias de
bichos quando eu era pequeno,
muito pequeno mesmo.7
Both the Cuban and the Brazilian, moreover, are deeply concerned with the
political status of black people in their respective countries. Guillén, long noted
for the presence of overt social protest in his work, identifies closely with the
common black laborers that populate his homeland. In Sóngoro Cosongo (1931)
and West Indies Ltd. (1934), for example, Guillén protests against economic
exploitation and the racist social order that supports it. As Ezequiel Martinez
Estrada has written:
Toda la poesía de Guillén . . . se inspira en el lema que resume
los derechos del hombre y del ciudadano: Libertad, igualidad y
fraternidad. Su obra es combate contra la opresión, los
privilegios y la rivalidad . . . 8
In "Caña," Guillén writes:
El negro
junto al cañaveral.
El yanqui
sobre el cañaveral.
La tierra
bajo el cañaveral.
¡ Sangre
que se nos va! 9
And in "Balada de los dos Abuelos," he indicts an entire social and economic
system:
Qué de barcos, qué de barcos! Qué
de negros, qué de negros! Qué
largo fulgor de cañas! Qué látigo
el del negrero!
Piedra de llanto y de sangre,
venas y ojos entreabiertos, y
madrugadas vacías, y atardeceres
de ingenio, y una gran voz, fuerte
voz despedazando el silencio.
¡Qué de barcos, qué de barcos,
qué de negros! 10
Similarly Jorge de Lima is acutely aware of the Negro's inferior social and
economic status in his own country, Brazil. Though better known as the poet of
the individual Negro consciousness, of doing for Black awareness in poetry
something similar to what José Lina do Rêgo and Jorge Amado did for the
Negro in prose fiction with their novels O Moleque Ricardo (1935) and Jubiabá
(1935), Jorge de Lima often succeeds in painting a poetic portrait of economic
and social serfdom. In one of his finest poems, "Pai Joao," the poet successfully
combines two seemingly disparate elements — the social and economic
ramifications of slavery as an institution and the noble, even morally superior,
spirit of the downtrodden black populace. As Cipriano Vitureira observes,
noting the sociological appeal of the titular subject of this poem, "No es un
hombre solo, ni como tal está tratado; es una clase social .... Hacia el final del
poema, en la sombra general, asoma el sentido mágico de inspiración racial." 11
As Lima presents it:
Pai Joao secou como um pau sem raiz. —
Pai Joao vai morrer. Pai Joao
remou nas canoas. —
Cavou a terra.
Fez brotar de chao a esmeralda,
Das fôlhas — café, cana, algodao.
Pai Joao cavou mais esmeraldas,
Que Pais Leme. A filha de Pai Joao
tinha um peito de
Turinha para os filhos de Ioiô mamar:
Quando o peito secou a filha de Pai Joao
Também secou agarrada num
Ferro de engomar.
A pele de Pai Joao ficou na ponta
Dos chicotes.
A forca de Pai Joao ficou no cabo
Da enxada e da foice.
A mulher de Pai Joao o branco
A roubou para fazer mucamas. O sangue de Pai
Joao se sumiu no sangue bom
Como um torrao de açúcar bruto
Numa panela de leite. —
Pai Joao foi cavalo para os filhos de Ioiô montar.
Pai Joao sabia histórias tao bonitas que
Davam vontade de chorar.
Pai Joao vai morrer.
Há urna noite là fora como a pele de Pai Joao.
Nem uma estrêla no ceu.
Parece até mandinga de Pai Joao.12
And in Poemas Negros (1947), the Brazilian poet again points to his country's
African heritage with pride; like Nicolás Guillén, he rejects the taint of a
supposed racial and cultural inferiority. Both poets strive to link the culture of
Africa to their respective countries by enumerating African deities and by
depicting the double curse of the Negro in America — his loss of cultural
identity through systematic enslavement and his concomitant economic
exploitation. But Guillén, like Jorge de Lima, is also fully capable of focusing
his attention on a single human soul rather than on an entire race. In "Velorio de
Papá Montero," he writes:
¡Ahora sí que te rompieron,
Papá Montero! En el solar
esperaban, pero te trajeron
muerto; fue bronca de jaladera,
pero te trajeron muerto; dicen
que él era tu ecobio, pero te
trajeron muerto; el hierro no
apareció, pero te trajeron
muerto.
Ya se acabó Baldomero: ¡zumba,
canalla y rumbero! Sólo dos velas
están quemando un poco de sombra;
para tu pequeña muerte con esas dos
velas sobra. Y aun te alumbran, más
que velas, la camisa colorada que
iluminó tus canciones, la prieta sal
de tus sones, y tu melena planchada.
¡Ahora sí que te rompieron,
Papá Montero! 13
Both Guillén and Lima consistently shift the focus of their attention from
the collective to the individual. This helps give their work sociological
breadth as well as psychological depth. But regardless of the focus, both poets
show similar thematic concerns. One of the most striking of these similarities
(and a quality which links the work of each of these poets to the best of Black
poetry in other Latin American countries) is the evocation of an African mythos.
Guillén, for example, conjures up the hypnotic aura of a traditional African
legend with his famous poem "Sensemaya":
¡Mayombe-bombe-mayombé!
Mayombe-bombe-mayombé!
May ombe-bombe-may ombé!
La culebra tiene los ojos de vidrio; La
culebra viene y se enreda en un palo; con sus
ojos de vidrio, en un palo, con sus ojos de
vidrio.
La culebra camina sin patas; La
culebra se esconde en la yerba;
caminando se esconde en la yerba,
caminando sin patas.
¡Mayombe-bombe-mayombé!
Mayombe-bombe-mayombé !
Mayombe-bombe-mayombé! 14
Another of his poems in this same category is "Balada del Güije" (the Güije is a
malevolent African water deity):
¡Ñeque, que se vaya el ñeque!
¡Güije, que se vaya el güije!
Las turbias aguas del río son
hondas y tienen muertos;
carapachos de tortuga, cabezas
de niños negros. De noche saca
sus brazos el río, y rasga el
silencio con sus uñas, que son
uñas de cocodrilo frenético.
Bajo el grito de los astros, bajo
una luna de incendio, ladra el
río entre las piedras y con
invisibles dedos, sacude el arco
del puente y estrangula a los
viajeros.
¡Ñeque, que se vaya el ñeque!
¡Güije, que se vaya el güije! 15
Jorge de Lima can likewise evoke memories of a deeply felt African
legacy. As he writes in "Exu comeu tarubá," from Poemas Negros:
O ar estava duro, gordo, oleoso:
a negra dentro da madorna;
e dentro da madorna — bruxas desenterradas.
No chao urna urupema com os cabelos da môça.
Foi entao que Exu comeu tarubá
e meteu a figa na mixira de peixe-boi.
Ai na distancia sem fim, môças foram roubadas,
e sóror Adelaide veio viajando de rede,
era alva ficou negra, era santa ficou lesa:
caiu na madorna, o ar duro, gordo, oleoso.
Exu começou a babar a mixira de peixe-boi.
o professor tirou o pincenê: estava traído pelo donatario,
sem barregas, sem ginetes, sem excravos. 16
And in "Xangô," Lima also sings of African themes and divinities:
Num sujo mocambo dos 'Quatro Recantos,'
quibundos, cafuzos, cabindas, mazombos
mandingam xandô. Oxum! Oxalá! Ô! Ê!
Dois feios calungas — oxalá e taió rodeados de contas, no
centro o Oxum! Oxum! Oxalá! Ô! Ê!
Caboclos, mulatos, negrinhas membrudas, aos
tombos gemendo, cantando, rodando,
mexendo os quadris e as mamas bojudas,
retumbam o tanta . . . Oxum! Oxalá! Ô! Ê!
17
Both Guillén and Lima succeed in evoking racial memories of their African past
but as we have seen they also depict the Negro experience in the Americas. The
outwardly simple, singsong aspects of some of these poems (and one must
remember that they are designed to be sung and chanted by unlettered people)
disguise a more profound sociological significance.
The Black poetry of Nicolás Guillen and Jorge de Lima is similar in
several ways, including the political, stylistic, and thematic aspects. Both poets
call for a reintegration of the African scions into the political and economic
mainstreams of their respective nations. They also stress the speech rhythms of
the proletariat, even while drawing heavily upon ballads,
popular songs, and traditional African legends. And they both are talented poets
who consistently create startling and unique images through which they lead the
reader into the black and mulatto experience in Brazil and Cuba. In doing this,
Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de Lima demonstrate the finest aspects of
Afro-American poetry. Yet due perhaps to the essentially optimistic and
visionary poetry of these two men, one is led to believe that if people of
good-will — of all skin colors — would only unite against racial prejudice and
economic exploitation, then a new and vital kind of "raza cósmica" would surely
result. But even in this larger, humanistic sense, their Black awareness poetry
was a necessary first stop, an initial effort through which black and mulatto
Latin Americans might cease to be sociologically and economically "invisible."
The Afro-American poetry of Nicolás Guillén and Jorge de Lima marked the
beginning of a great struggle to rekindle the flames of ethnic awareness and
pride; but it has also transcended the merely regionalistic or picturesque and
become universal and inspiring in its appeal.
NOTAS
1. Gregory Rabassa, "Negro Themes and Characteristics in Brazilian Literature," African Forum, 2
(1967), 20-34.
2. Jean Franco, The Modem Culture of Latin America: Society and the Artist (Middlesex:' Pelican
Books, 1967), p. 131.
3. Nicolás Guillén, Antología Mayor (Mexico D.F.: Editorial Diogenes, 1972), pp. 27-28.
4. Ibid., p. 28.
5. Jorge De Lima, Antología Poética (Río de Janeiro: Editorial Sabia, 1969), pp. 53-56.
6. John Nist, The Modernist Movement in Brazil: A Literary History (Austin: University of
Texas Press, 1967), pp. 147-148.
7. Lima, Antología Poética, p. 74.
8. Ezequiel Martinez Estrada, La Poesía Afrocubana de Nicolás Guillén (Montevideo: Editorial
Arca), p. 87.
9. Guillén, Antología Mayor, p. 46.
10. Ibid., pp. 77-78.
11. Cipriano S. Vitureira, La Poesía de Jorge de Lima: Estudio y Antología (Montevideo:
Ediciones "Amizade," 1963), p. 13.
12. Jorge de Lima, Poesía (Río de Janeiro: Livraría Agir Editora, 1963), p. 38.
13. Guillén, Antología Mayor, pp. 44-45.
14. Ibid., p. 68.
15. Ibid., p. 81.
16. Lima, Antología Poética, p. 73.
17. Ibid., p. 36.